This is a very cool little movie, and YES, the soundtrack is very good. Bay Area residents will recognize the Castro theater, some liquor stores, and even the town of Alviso, which is now incorporated as part of San Jose. There's a mix of black kids, Mexican kids, Asian kids, and even some American Indian kids. There's some great stock shots of cruising, smoking, drinking, eating, dancing, construction work, bridge-building, and even some activism as the kids get involved with petitioning Washington DC for some social change. There's some cool newspaper headlines from 1958 on this particular youth project.

While the movie itself may be public domain, one has to be careful with the music rights, as you can hear Ray Charles "What'd I Say" on the jukebox as kids dance up a storm, and some cool covers of "Johnny B Good," and "La Bamba." There's also some great surf and doo-wop songs in the background.

The film ends with a nice celebration as the kids go swimming in a creekside swimming hole, as the song "La Bamba" plays in the background.

This is a very cool movie, indeed. There are some incredible scenes of street-corner gangs with names like "The Lonely Ones," "The Esquires," "Los Lobos," "Aces" and so on. The clothes and pompadours are a joy to watch. The story is about some guy who convinced some early 60's gang members to put aside their differences and work together for free doing jobs like painting houses for people who could not do it themselves. The program was called Youth For Service, and it benefitted the gang youth by giving them a sense of necessity, while helping those in need. Cool. The visuals are the best part of this film. If you love post WW2 greaserdom, you won't find any better than this one.

This film documents the Youth for Service project in San Francisco during the 50s; a project that recruited youth gangs to do various community service projects, usually involving construction, maintenance, or environmental work. The project itself looks quite successful in channeling the gangs into constructive activity; one wonders if it is still going on today and if not, why not. But beyond that, this film is a wonderful document of 50s gang life and teen culture. Gang members narrate certain parts of the film themselves, using almost unintelligible gang lingo. We get to see inner city youth in their own environment, hanging out at various places and amusing themselves in various ways, both acceptable and not acceptable. A whole host of gang jackets and insignia are shown and the film even has a cool homegrown rock-and-roll soundtrack. The adult narrators speak about the youth in surprisingly respectful terms, yet they are not overly idealistic about their project. Their attitude is refereshingly free from either fear or pity. Overall, this is one of the most realistic and best juvenile delinquent films I've ever seen.
Ratings: Camp/Humor Value: *. Weirdness: ***. Historical Interest: *****. Overall Rating: *****.

Amazing overview of the Youth For Service program ran in San Fransisco where youth gangs... er I should say "clubs" as they are referred to in the film leave their misunderstandings and pasts at the door and help in community projects. Utterly fasicnating beginning of a gang member speaking in (I think) jive, and I could only catch maybe a third of what he was saying. Is this program still in existance? I would doubt it, as the 'clubs' here are much more agressive and hostile today then in 1961.
Highly reccomended not just for the film itself, but for the amazing score as well.